From: "Adrian Barnes" <adrian@orunner.freeserve.co.uk>
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 23:44:10 +0100
Subject: England team for SHI
Message-Id: <7t0p4l$guv$1@news6.svr.pol.co.uk>


The England Team for the SHI this weekend in South Wales can be found at
http://www.orunner.freeserve.co.uk






From: DodieMJC@aol.com
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 14:28:51 EDT
Subject: Help requests from PE teachers
Message-ID: <29e1784f.252505e3@aol.com>


This forum may soon see requests from PE teachers around the US as Barb 
Sleight and I recently taught at a PE conference and suggested that they post 
questions here if need be.  PLEASE BE NICE!  Most of you are very gracious to 
newbies, but there have been some sour responses to such requests in the 
past.  It is in all of our interests to help newcomers now and in the future. 
 Thanks for any gracious assistance you can provide.  Mary Jo


From: John Bartholomew <jbart@lmc.com>
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 10:47:30 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: Contact for Fred Veler wanted
Message-Id: <199909301747.KAA14335@navigator.pdxuxbre.lmc.com>


Posted for a friend - please reply to Jerry directly:

   To Fred Veler,
   
   <If he's not on O-Net, can someone who knows his new e-mail address in 
   Montana forward this?>
   
   I'd like to continue the brief conversation we had at Spooner Lake last 
   Sunday about teaching orienteering through community parks & recreation 
   programs. Drop me a line at Jerry.L.Rhodes@kp.org.
   
   Thanks,
   Jerry
   CROC
   


From: Ann Baylis <100357.2350@compuserve.com>
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 03:30:51 -0400
Subject: (Report/Results) 1999 Australian Schools Championships
Message-ID: <199909300331_MC2-86F6-F8D3@compuserve.com>


Indvidual

New South Wales, seeking their sixth Australian schools' title 
in a row, took a narrow lead after the individual day at 
Timberlight, near Goulburn. They are one point clear of South
Australia, with Victoria a further two back, and these three 
states will probably fight out the competition in tomorrow's
relays. 

The open terrain made for some very close racing, particularly
amongst the senior boys, in which two and a half minutes
covered more than half the field between sixth and nineteenth.
Not close, however, was the contest for the lead. David
Brickhill-Jones was the pick of the field even before the
start of the year, and had further enhanced his reputation in a
season in which he had made the Junior World Championships
team, and come fourth in one of the WOC selection trials. He
was a hot favourite and ran in a matter befitting it to 
finish three and a half minutes clear. Behind 
him,  three were separated by less than half a minute. The
consistent Ian Meyer took second place, just ahead of David
Moran and Adrian Jackson, for whom this was a career-best
result.

Had the race been run six months ago, Amber Tomas would
have been just as hot a favourite in the senior girls', but the
foot injury which forced her out of JWOC - and would keep
her out of the relay - is still not completely right, which 
brought her back to the field. It was one of her South Australian
teammates who filled the breach. Zoe Radford has performed
very impressively at times in the last year or two, although prone
to the occasional lapse (which junior isn't?), as had happened
at the previous Sunday's NSW Championships. By the time
she caught Georgie Statham - the pair started two minutes 
apart for the third time in four years - she was in a commanding
position, and won by two minutes. Nicola Woolford proved that
her impressive win in Wagga was no fluke by leading a group 
of four within a minute, with Tomas in third place. 

The junior boys looked to be a race in four before the start, and
proved to be so, pitting the New South Wales M14 duo of 
David Meyer and Julian Dent against the older pair of Lachlan
Hallett, from South Australia, and James Allston, from
Tasmania. The very fast running was well-suited to Hallett,
and it was no real surprise to see him take the lead halfway
through the finishing list. He had to survive a close challenge
from Dent, but had just enough in reserve. Meyer was third
and Allston fourth.

One race without any clear favourites was the junior girls, with
many of the entrants making their debut this week at a serious
national level. Ilka Barr had been the most impressive at the
NSW Championships, but it was another Victorian who came
to the fore. Mace Neve, daughter of former Australian WOC 
representative Sue Key, has shown much promise locally in the 
last year or two, and broke through for her first major win at 
national level. Her closest challenger was the South Australian
Katie Dose, who got within eighteen seconds. In a great day
for the Victorians, Barr was third and Moira Goddard fourth.

Relay

The defining moment of the relay came early in the day. The 
junior boys had come through the spectator control first, with
David Meyer turning the tables on Lachlan Hallett to be just
under a minute clear. The gap was maintained as they came 
into the finishing stretch, with the last hurdle the split second-
last control. Hallett punched the wrong one, and from that
moment on New South Wales were warm favourites to win 
their sixth successive title. As the day went on their position
got stronger and stronger, and their eventual margin was an
emphatic fourteen points.

The first leg of the junior boys' also illustrated a central
theme of the day; a potential epic contest thwarted. It also
happened in the senior girls', where South Australia and 
Tasmania had shared the top six places between them in the
individual - but Amber Tomas's injury shifted the balance
dramatically in Tasmania's favour. 

New South Wales were never going to be seriously 
challenged in the junior boys' once South Australia were
eliminated. Although it was of academic interest only,
the other South Australians kept going, and actually reached
the second changeover first after Troy Merchant overhauled
Matthew Woodward. Michael Ashforth also put up a fight,
but Julian Dent was just too good and had run down a three-
minute gap by halfway. Three consistent legs gave the ACT
second, whilst Dane Cavanagh just held off a fast-finishing
James Allston to hold third.

Zoe Radford took up where she had left off in the individual
to put the South Australians in front of the senior girls', but
with their weakened team a gap of thirty seconds was 
never going to be enough. Emma Williams had her best
run of the week and kept the team in second, somewhat 
against the odds, but Georgie Statham, not especially 
convincing by her own standards, was still good enough to
give the Tasmanians a comfortable lead, which Nicola 
Woolford held to the end. The real action was behind that,
first through a stirring run by Rachel Dickinson which gave
New South Wales second place despite a more than reasonable
last leg by Catherine Loye, and two results which were 
critical for the overall score. First, South Australia needed
third place to take third overall, which they achieved with a
bit to spare, then Victoria, severely weakened by the loss 
of Clemmie Thompson to a knee injury, needed the two
points for finishing to take second. They achieved it, 
relegating the Tasmanians to fourth despite being only
two points out of second.

The closest finish of the day was in the senior boys'. The 
crowd was warmed up by a stirring sprint on the first leg
between Adrian Jackson and Mitch Le Fevre, with all
but one of the teams within three minutes of the lead. 
Victoria took control after that through a strong second
leg by Matthew Schepisi, and looked set to win 
comfortably when they changed over three minutes
clear. Brendon King, for New South Wales, had
swallowed that by halfway against a slightly off-guard
Simon Goddard, and the two traded the lead until the
second-last control. Goddard ran to the wrong one, and
that was that - the thirty seconds lost were irretrievable
so close to the end. Darren Southwell's fine last leg took
the ACT into third, and while it had no impact on the 
overall result, David Brickhill-Jones was just as imposing
as he had been the previous day, recording the fastest
leg time by three minutes.

The Victorian junior girls were red-hot favourites after
their individual performance. They were made to fight
for it for two legs. South Australia's Zebedy Hallett led
a closely-bunched group home after the first leg, and 
New South Wales were still in front after two legs -
just - but the individual winner, Mace Neve, was out
last for Victoria, and dominated the final leg. Her time
was the fastest of the day and gave her team four 
minutes in hand over New South Wales, who just held  
off the consistent Tasmanians.

Blair Trewin
Yarra Valley OC/Bushflyers OC
Australia

Overall Standings

1 New South Wales       50
2 Victoria              36
3 South Australia               35
4 Tasmania              34
5 ACT                   26
6 Queensland            22
7 Western Australia     9

Junior Girls

1 Mace Neve             VIC     24.34
2 Katie Dose            SA      24.52
3 Ilka Barr             VIC     25.34
4 Moira Goddard         VIC     26.11
5 Erin Post             WA      26.15
6 Kate Hennelly         QLD     26.20
7 Felicity Brown                NSW     27.46
8 Alice Prudhoe         NSW     27.58
9 Kirrilee Russell              NSW     28.39
10 Andrea Woolford      TAS     28.43
11 Amy Cusworth VIC     28.44
12 Zebedy Hallett       SA      29.06
13 Emma Warren          TAS     29.18
14 Clare Murphy         NSW     29.19
15 Ainsley Cavanagh     QLD     29.30
16 Belinda Harris               SA      29.57
17 Maria Bernardi       ACT     29.58
18 Sarah Nathan         WA      30.48
19 Shura Jones          WA      32.03
20 Anthea Barrow        TAS     32.41
21 Kay Willmore         SA      33.08
22 Imogen Fry           ACT     33.24
23 Jacqueline Wood      QLD     33.41
24 Lauren Durbridge     ACT     36.08
25 Kristen Mair         QLD     44.40
26 Vanessa McKenzie     ACT     49.57

Teams

1 Victoria              76.19 (Neve, Barr, Goddard)
2 South Australia               83.55 (Dose, Hallett, Harris)
3 New South Wales       84.23 (Brown, Prudhoe, Russell)
4 Western Australia     89.06 (Post, Nathan, Jones)
5 Queensland            89.31 (Hennelly, Cavanagh, Wood)
6 Tasmania              90.42 (Woolford, Warren, Barrow)
7 ACT                   99.30 (Bernardi, Fry, Durbridge)

Junior Boys

1 Lachlan Hallett               SA      22.16
2 Julian Dent           NSW     22.24
3 David Meyer           NSW     23.11
4 James Allston         TAS     23.42
5 Troy Merchant         SA      25.32
6 Murray Scown          ACT     25.44
7 David Brownridge      VIC     26.19
8 Hayden Lebbink        VIC     26.27
9 Conrad Elson          TAS     26.29
10 Dane Cavanagh        QLD     26.33
11 Michael Ashforth     SA      28.10
12 Patrick Bernardi     ACT     28.29
13 Adam Wimberley       QLD     28.32
14 Ivan Komyshan        WA      29.00
15 Louis Elson          TAS     29.14
16 James Moore          ACT     29.24
17 Matthew Woodward     NSW     30.05
18 Lachie McGuckian     VIC     30.16
19 Nicholas Lawrance    ACT     30.30
20 Evan Barr            VIC     31.14
21 Ian Rigby            NSW     32.00
22 Jason Nicolson       SA      32.42
23 Chris Ardley         WA      34.52
24 Greg Wilson          QLD     35.51
25 Mike Corkran         QLD     36.06

Teams

1 New South Wales       75.57 (Dent, Meyer, Woodward)
2 South Australia               76.15 (Hallett, Merchant, Ashforth)
3 Tasmania              79.25 (Allston, C.Elson, L.Elson)
4 Victoria              83.02 (Brownridge, Lebbink, McGuckian)
5 ACT                   84.43 (Scown, Bernardi, Lawrance)
6 Queensland            90.56 (Cavanagh, Wimberley, Wilson)

Senior Girls

1 Zoe Radford           SA      35.42
2 Nicola Woolford       TAS     37.06
3 Amber Tomas           SA      37.26
4 Grace Elson           TAS     37.28
5 Georgie Statham       TAS     37.37
6 Catherine Loye                SA      38.37
7 Rachel Dickinson      NSW     40.22
8 Clemmie Thompson      VIC     41.28
9 Fiona Middleton       ACT     42.19
10 Phoebe Dent          NSW     42.30
11 Katherine Saye       ACT     43.24
12 Nadia Komyshan       WA      43.56
13 Alitia Dougall               QLD     44.04
14 Jasmine Elson                TAS     45.12
15 Briohny Davey        NSW     45.51
16 Lian Prendergast     VIC     46.08
17 Emily Hart           VIC     48.25
18 Stephanie Wood       QLD     50.09
19 Cynthia Moberg       QLD     50.55
20 Deborah Hay          ACT     51.49
21 Alison Alick         QLD     55.04
22 Alexandra Sinickas   VIC     55.22
23 Catherine Murphy     NSW     55.28
24 Emma Williams        SA      60.00

Teams

1 South Australia               111.45 (Radford, Tomas, Loye)
2 Tasmania              112.11 (Woolford, G.Elson, Statham)
3 New South Wales       128.43 (Dickinson, Dent, Davey)
4 Victoria              136.01 (Thompson, Prendergast, Hart)
5 ACT                   137.32 (Middleton, Saye, Hay)
6 Queensland            145.08 (Dougall, Wood, Moberg)

Senior Boys

1 David Brickhill-Jones TAS     26.50
2 Ian Meyer             NSW     30.17
3 David Moran           QLD     30.38
4 Adrian Jackson                VIC     30.43
5 Brendon King          NSW     31.55
6 Matthew Schepisi      VIC     32.42
7 Darren Southwell      ACT     32.58
8 Steven Todkill                NSW     33.11
9= Kerrin Rattray               SA      33.20
9= Andrew Dent          VIC     33.20
11 Peter Preston                NSW     33.37
12 Peter Hawkins                ACT     33.48
13 David Rhind          ACT     33.54
14 Simon Goddard        VIC     33.58
15 Miguel Clark         SA      34.27
16 Oskar Booth          ACT     34.29
17 Chris Davill         SA      35.06
18 Michael Elderfield   WA      35.16
19 Mitch Le Fevre       TAS     35.21
20 Sam Wilson           QLD     36.43
21 Stewart Greig                WA      39.09
22 Ian Anderson         QLD     42.09
23 Bart Seward          WA      44.10
24 Jarrah O'Brien       TAS     44.15
25 Nathan Lawley        QLD     46.50
26 Sam Winters          SA      52.30

Teams

1 New South Wales       95.23 (Meyer, King, Todkill)
2 Victoria              96.45 (Jackson, Schepisi, Dent)
3 ACT                   100.40 (Southwell, Hawkins, Rhind)
4 South Australia               102.53 (Rattray, Clark, Davill)
5 Tasmania              106.26 (Brickhill-Jones, Le Fevre, O'Brien)
6 Queensland            109.29 (Moran, Wilson, Anderson)
7 Western Australia     118.35 (Elderfield, Greig, Seward)      
 
Relays

Junior Girls

1 Victoria              74.55 (Moira Goddard 26.13, Ilka Barr 25.36, Mace
Neve 23.06)
2 New South Wales       78.46 (Felicity Brown 26.00, Alice Prudhoe 25.20,
Kirrilee Russell 27.26)
3 Tasmania              79.14 (Anthea Barrow 26.27, Emma Warren 25.31,
Andrea Woolford 27.36)
4 South Australia               84.42 (Zebedy Hallett 25.18, Belinda Harris
31.18, Katie Dose 28.06)
5 Western Australia     97.10 (Erin Post 25.52, Sarah Nathan 42.19, Shura
Jones 28.59)
  ACT                   DNF (Imogen Fry 37.20, Lauren Durbridge 37.55,
Maria Bernardi DNF)
  Queensland            DNF (Kate Hennelly DNF, Jacqueline Wood 36.46,
Ainsley Cavanagh 27.05)

Junior Boys

1 New South Wales       63.37 (David Meyer 18.25, MatthewWoodward 26.34,
Julian Dent 18.38)
2 ACT                   69.49 (James Moore 22.54, Murray Scown 22.49,
Patrick Bernardi 24.06)
3 Queensland            74.51 (Greg Wilson 26.10, Adam Wimberley 25.24,
Dane Cavanagh 23.17)
4 Tasmania              75.16 (Conrad Elson 24.58, Louis Elson 30.10, James
Allston 20.08)
  South Australia               DNF (Lachlan Hallett DNF, Troy Merchant
22.33, Michael Ashforth 22.17)
  Victoria              DNF (David Brownridge 24.08, Lachie McGuckian
27.37, Hayden Lebbink DNF)

Senior Girls

1 Tasmania              102.48 (Grace Elson 32.29, Georgie Statham 36.54,
Nicola Woolford 33.25)
2 New South Wales       106.31 (Phoebe Dent 33.07, Briohny Davey 42.36,
Rachel Dickinson 30.48)
3 South Australia               108.01 (Zoe Radford 31.50, Emma Williams
41.04, Catherine Loye 35.07)
4 Queensland            119.52 (Alitia Dougall 40.32, Stephanie Wood 37.40,
Cynthia Moberg 41.40)
5 ACT                   131.52 (Deborah Hay 41.04, Katheirne Saye 48.08,
Fiona Middleton 42.40)
6 Victoria              136.59 (Lian Prendergast 42.07, Emily Hart 44.10,
Alexandra Sinickas 50.32)

Senior Boys

1 New South Wales       88.28 (Ian Meyer 28.10, Steven Todkill 32.01,
Brendon King 28.17)
2 Victoria              89.01 (Adrian Jackson 27.35, Matthew Schepisi
29.35, Simon Goddard 31.51)
3 ACT                   92.08 (Peter Hawkins 28.03, Oskar Booth 35.44,
Darren Southwell 28.21)
4 Queensland            94.17 (Ian Anderson 30.56, Sam Wilson 35.38, David
Moran 27.43)
5 South Australia               96.35 (Kerrin Rattray 29.49, Chris Davill
31.49, Miguel Clark 34.57)
6 Tasmania              100.44 (Mitch Le Fevre 27.34, Jarrah O'Brien 48.36,
David Brickhill-Jones 24.34)
7 Western Australia     112.44 (Bart Seward 46.47, Michael Elderfield
30.47, Stewart Greig 35.10)


From: Ann Baylis <100357.2350@compuserve.com>
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 02:36:00 -0400
Subject: (Report/Results) 1999 NSW Championships/Australian
Message-ID: <199909300236_MC2-86F7-8970@compuserve.com>


The women's competition in the Qantas Australian Orienteering League
will come down to the wire, after neither of the two main contenders
advanced their score significantly in the penultimate individual round,
at the New South Wales Championships near Wagga Wagga on Sunday.
Nicki Taws, who started the round one point behind Natasha Key, had
the opportunity to advance her position significantly in Key's absence,
but her equal third placing only advanced her position by that single
point. The result means that the title will probably go to whichever of
the two places the higher in next week's Australian Championships, 
although Tracy Bluett retains a theoretical chance if she wins and the 
others fare poorly.

Mary Fien has been concentrating on her running in the last twelve
months, to the extent that she had dropped out of the rankings 
altogether. On a day when the hills were steep and the terrain physical,
the strongest runners were likely to come to the fore, and she showed
that she has lost nothing in her absence with a convincing win, adding
another piece to the puzzle that is next week's form guide. Clare 
Hawthorne was an equally unexpected second placegetter, having
experienced injury problems since her achievement of the same
result in the final WOC selection trial back in May. Taws and Jo
Allison had a rare dead-heat for third.

Many of the leading Australian men at the moment are injured, ill or
out of form, making the fields the most open for a long time, and the
round of state championships over the preceding weekends had 
thrown up Bruce Arthur as a surprise winner in two successive 
weeks. He didn't come close to making it three in a row, but none
of the others were especially convincing either, until Troy de Haas,
the one genuine class oriienteer of the field, came through. In an even 
longer race at the Victorian Championships, he had blown up in
the last twenty minutes, but there was no repetition here, despite
the demands of a warm and humid day. It was a solid performance,
and in light of what the rest of the field was doing that was enough
for a very convincing win, by eight minutes. Behind him it was a 
day for experience, with the top six, unusually in recent years, 
having an average age of thirty. Separated by six seconds for the
minor placings were Blair Trewin, in easily his best result of an
injury-interrupted year, and Jock Davis, now retired from international
competition but still very competitive domestically. With de Haas 
planning to drop back to M20 next week, the result posed more
questions than it answered about the prospects for that race.

The strongest fields outside the elite classes were in the juniors,
with most at close to full strength with the influx of state teams
for this week's Australian Schools Championships. The most
convincing performance of the day was in M14. David Meyer
and Julian Dent are probably the two best orienteers of that age
to have emerged in Australia, and have fought many a great
contest over the last two years, but this time Meyer had seven
minutes on his rival. Nicola Woolford was also a comfortable
victor in W18, ahead of her more-fancied Tasmanian teammate
Georgie Statham, who was third. A less surprising comfortable
winner was JWOC representative David Brickhill-Jones in M18,
although David Moran might have pushed him more closely but
for errors early. Rachel Dickinson gave the home club something
to cheer about with her win in W16, whilst the W14s provided 
one of the closest races of the day, Erin Post leading three
within less than a minute, and Kerrin Rattray was impressive in
winning M16.

The older classes provided most of the better veteran contests -
in particular, the three oldest womens' classes, W55, W60 and
W65, were each decided by less than a minute, with Joyce
Rowlands' margin of five seconds over Maureen Ogilvie the
closest of the lot. M60, in which John Lyon led three within a
minute, was also notably close. Most of the longer veteran 
courses were distinguished by fine individual performances rather
than close finishes. The pick of them was probably Geoff 
Lawford's run in M40, with a kilometre-rate which would have 
been more than competitive with the elites, although Patricia
Aspin, one of two New Zealand winners, also impressed. Yarra
Valley scored a trifecta in M55 through Alex Tarr, Ray
Sheldon and Tim Dent, a rare feat for a club in an event outside
its home state (possibly unmatched since the then-Red
Kangaroos ran first, second and third in M35 in the 1982
Australian Championships). 

The week of competition continues on Tuesday with the 
Australian Schools Championships, on the fast gully-spur
of Timberlight.

Blair Trewin
Yarra Valley OC/Bushflyers OC
Australia

M21A (14.2km)

1 Troy de Haas          ACT     93.53
2 Blair Trewin          VIC     102.01
3 Jock Davis            NSW     102.07
4 Scott Simson          ALL/Q   105.32
5 Eric Morris           SA      105.55
6 Anthony Scott         ACT     106.36
7 Gudbrand Lien         NSW*    108.07
8 Craig Dufty           WA      108.25
9 Jim Russell           VIC     108.57
10 Andy Hogg            WA      111.44
11 Robert Preston       NSW     112.17
12 Reuben Smith         SA      112.27
13 Phil Wood            NZL*    112.31
14 Bruce Graham         VIC     113.12
15 Andrew Hill          NSW     115.48
16 Bruce Arthur         SA      115.52
17 Graham Turner        ACT     117.16
18 Tom Walter           ACT     122.06
19 Michael Derlacki     ACT     124.49
20 Alan Garde           NSW     127.10
21 Alex Randall         VIC     133.35
   Michael Davis                NSW     DNF
   Martin Groth         NSW     DNF
   Jon McComb           NSW     DNF
   Jason McCrae         ACT     DNF
   Ben Rattray          SA      DNF
   Ben Schulz           ALL/Q   DNF
   John Toomey          WA      DNF

Teams

1 Canberra Cockatoos            317.45 (de Haas, Scott, Turner)
2 Victorian Nuggets             324.10 (Trewin, Russell, Graham)
3 NSW Stingers                  330.12 (J.Davis, Preston, Hill)
4 Southern Arrows               334.14 (Morris, Smith, Arthur)

W21A (7.2km)

1 Mary Fien             NSW     60.50
2 Clare Hawthorne       VIC     63.46
3= Nicki Taws           ACT     65.08
3= Jo Allison           ACT     65.08
5 Julie Calder          NSW     68.00
6 Georgie Macken        NSW     73.24
7 Cathy Liggins         NSW     76.10
8 Anna Sheldon          ALL/Q   77.49
9 Belinda Allison               ACT     81.31
10 Allison Jones                ACT     87.01
11 Sheralee Bailey      NSW     88.56
12 Susannah King        VIC     89.12
13 Rachel West          WA      92.27
14 Jane Pulford         ACT     94.51
15 Annwen Candy WA      101.07
16 Cath Chalmers        WA      120.00
17 Karen Staudte                VIC     124.25
   Natalie Smith                WA      DNF

Teams

1 NSW Stingers                  128.50 (Fien, Calder)
2 Canberra Cockatoos            130.16 (Taws, J.Allison)
3 Victorian Nuggets             152.58 (Hawthorne, King)
4 Western Nomads                193.34 (West, Candy)

M10 (1.6km)

1 Kelsey Dougall                QLD     17.23
2 Toby Clark            SA      17.59
3 Thomas McIntrye       QLD     19.04

M12A (2.2km)

1 Simon Uppill          SA      20.59
2 Brett Merchant                SA      22.29
3 Grant Erbacher                ACT     24.59

M14A (4.5km)

1 David Meyer           NSW     32.03
2 Julian Dent           NSW     39.33
3 Jason Nicolson                SA      42.01

M16A (5.8km)

1 Kerrin Rattray                SA      49.07
2 Darren Southwell      ACT     52.19
3 Lachlan Hallett               SA      53.56

M18A (7.5km)

1 David Brickhill-Jones TAS     60.34
2 David Moran           QLD     64.01
3 Ian Meyer             NSW     66.56

M20A (9.6km)

1 David Senn            NSW     87.27
2 Joel Johnston         QLD     111.03
3 Damon Dickinson       NSW     112.28

M35A (9.6km)

1 Robert Vincent                NSW     73.20
2 Martin Wehner         ACT     77.40
3 Tim Hatley            VIC     79.43

M40A (7.5km)

1 Geoff Lawford         ACT     56.09
2 Ray Pratt             NZL     64.51
3 Ross Coyle            NSW     68.00

M45A (7.2km)

1 Ian McKenzie          NSW     62.54
2 Nick Dytlewski                NSW     63.43
3 Gordon Wilson         NSW     69.08

M50A (5.8km)

1 Paul Hoopmann SA      51.03
2 Stephen Flick         NSW     52.41
3 Hugh Moore            ACT     53.02

M55A (4.9km)

1 Alex Tarr             VIC     49.55
2 Ray Sheldon           VIC     53.56
3 Tim Dent              VIC     58.07

M60A (4.0km)

1 John Lyon             SA      45.47
2 Max Read              QLD     45.56
3 Clive Pope            QLD     46.50

M65A (4.2km)

1 Ian Hassall           NSW     46.51
2 John Earls            QLD     56.37
3 Tony Mount            TAS     66.33

M70A (2.5km)

1 Neil Schafer          NSW     37.55
2 Ray Kelly             QLD     39.32
3 Hermann Wehner        ACT     40.06

W10 (1.6km)

1 Bronwyn Steele                NSW     17.30
2 Ineka Booth           ACT     19.49
3 Alice Edmonds         VIC     23.07

W12A (2.2km)

1 Maria Bernardi                ACT     23.42
2 Melinda Jackson       VIC     24.23
3 Heather Harding       ACT     24.36

W14A (3.0km)

1 Erin Post             WA      28.50
2 Katie Dose            SA      29.08
3 Zebedy Hallett                SA      29.16

W16A (4.2km)

1 Rachel Dickinson      NSW     48.47
2 Ilka Barr             VIC     50.42
3 Helen Sheldon         QLD     54.16

W18A (5.0km)

1 Nicola Woolford       TAS     56.34
2 Clemmie Thompson      VIC     61.13
3 Georgie Statham       TAS     62.01

W20A (5.8km)

1 Kathryn Ewels         VIC     54.44
2 Felicity Anderson     NZL     58.40
3 Orla Murray           NSW     59.20

W35A (5.8km)

1 Jenny Bourne          ACT     59.19
2 Carolyn Jackson       VIC     65.28
3 Gayle Radstaak                ACT     74.04

W40A (4.9km)

1 Liz Abbott            ACT     58.26
2 Helen Edmonds         VIC     60.49
3 Julia Prudhoe         NSW     67.05

W45A (5.0km)

1 Patricia Aspin                NZL     55.29
2 Robin Uppill          SA      59.39
3 Ann Scown             ACT     72.19

W50A (4.2km)

1 Val Hodsdon           NSW     53.45
2 Peta Whitford         VIC     60.38
3 Judy Allison          ACT     65.20

W55A (4.0km)

1 Jill Dalton           NZL     59.42
2 Penny Dufty           WA      60.17
3 Dale Ann Gordon       VIC     61.02

W60A (2.5km)

1 Sue Mount             TAS     42.58
2 Dorothy Adrian                VIC     43.24
3 Dawn Beck             QLD     46.14

W65A (2.5km)

1 Joyce Rowlands        VIC     44.42
2 Maureen Ogilvie       NSW     44.47
3 Jeffa Lyon            SA      46.46


From: Wai Man Raymond Chung <cz521@freenet.toronto.on.ca>
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1999 02:17:06 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Ontario Orienteering Championship.
Message-ID: <Pine.3.89.9909300243.B14296-0100000@queen>


To all,

Silly me.  I was so busy entering in the main part of the 
competition information that I forgot to include the 
dates of the event.  

It is being held on October 9 and 10 (Canadian Thanksgiving
weekend).  

Raymond Chung